JAKARTA, Indonesia -- One Fighting Championship made its second
foray into Indonesian territory on Friday at the Istora Senayan
Stadium, and it resulted in a host of stoppages, as only three
fights went the distance.

The fight started slowly, as Colossa scored with repeated left
inside low kicks to the lead thigh of his opponent. However, he
struggled to find his range against an adversary with fast footwork
and non-stop lateral movement. In the second round, Colossa took
control, as the low kicks began to take their toll and seemed to
rob Boku of some of the spring in his step. The South African found
another gear in round three and appeared close to securing a
finish, as he pounded on Boku, the former One FC lightweight
champion, with knees and elbows.

Boku survived to hear the final bell, but the decision against him
was a forgone conclusion. Once the verdict was read, Colossa took
aim at reigning One FC lightweight titleholder Shinya Aoki.
“Since the beginning of One FC, my campaign [has been] for the
belt, to fight for the title,” he said. “That’s what I want, and
Aoki is holding the title. If the One FC management [wants] us to
fight, I will be ready. Fans want to see exciting fights, and it
will be striker versus jiu-jitsu fighter -- an amazing fight. This
fight needs to happen for One FC.”

Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com

Fodor made a statement in his debut.

Meanwhile, Caros Fodor
(8-3) made a serious statement in his promotional debut, as he
battered the previously undefeated Seung Ho
Yang (6-1) for three rounds. The Ultimate Fighting Championship
and Strikeforce veteran roughed up his Korean opponent with some
dirty boxing and came close to finishing him with a kimura in the
opening round.

“Tommy” showed plenty of heart but was comprehensively outclassed
by Fodor, who already looks like a potential contender for Aoki’s
lightweight belt.

The Indonesian contingent at One FC 10 sent the crowd home happy,
earning three wins in their four fights.

It did not start out well for the locals, however, as flyweight
Brianata
Rosadhi (1-1) lost by technical submission to lanky Malaysian
Raymond
Tan (2-0), who put him to sleep with a guillotine choke in 21
seconds.

Indonesian honor was restored when Max Metino
(1-0) submitted Long Sophy
(0-1) with a keylock in the second round. The Cambodian was
incensed by the decision to halt the fight and was adamant that he
never actually tapped. Replays appeared to suggest he had a
case.

Light heavyweight Vincent
Majid (1-0) delivered another popular submission win, as he
finished Malaysian Eugenio Tan (1-2) with a keylock early in the
opening frame.

Elsewhere, Dutch lightweight Vincent
Latoel (14-13-2) represented his ancestral home of Indonesia
and made a successful comeback from a four-year absence, submitting
fellow Dutchman Willy Ni (15-8)
with a first-round guillotine choke.

Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com

Butler continues to impress.

Jake
Butler (3-0) cemented his status as the fastest-rising light
heavyweight in Asia with his third win under the One FC banner. The
former NCAA wrestler wasted no time in taking down James
Kouame (2-2), flattening out the Canadian kickboxer and
finishing him with an arm-triangle choke in their catchweight
bout.

Butler was one of three fighters from the Singapore-based Evolve
MMA camp to emerge victorious. Featherweight Bruno Pucci
(3-0) handed Bashir
Ahmad (2-1) his first loss with a first-round rear-naked choke,
while Almiro
Barros (1-0) bested Kian Pham
(6-8)
by unanimous decision.

Finally, Hong Kong-based heavyweight Alain
Ngalani (1-0) made a successful MMA debut, stopping Mahmoud
Hassan (1-2) by technical knockout in the first round. Ngalani
stunned the Egyptian with a spinning heel kick, which glanced off
his forehead, and then swarmed him with a flurry of strikes for the
stoppage.